US3739304A - Resonator interconnections in monolithic crystal filters - Google Patents

Resonator interconnections in monolithic crystal filters Download PDF

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US3739304A
US3739304A US00183863A US3739304DA US3739304A US 3739304 A US3739304 A US 3739304A US 00183863 A US00183863 A US 00183863A US 3739304D A US3739304D A US 3739304DA US 3739304 A US3739304 A US 3739304A
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resonators
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A Braun
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03HIMPEDANCE NETWORKS, e.g. RESONANT CIRCUITS; RESONATORS
    • H03H9/00Networks comprising electromechanical or electro-acoustic devices; Electromechanical resonators
    • H03H9/46Filters
    • H03H9/54Filters comprising resonators of piezoelectric or electrostrictive material
    • H03H9/56Monolithic crystal filters
    • H03H9/566Electric coupling means therefor

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  • This invention relates to energy translating devices and, more particularly, to monolithic crystal filters.
  • the term monolithic crystal filter as used herein is meant to define the basic filter structure disclosed in US. Pat. No. 3,564,463, issued on Feb. 16,1971 to W. B. Beaver and R. A. Sykes.
  • the Beaver-Sykes apparatus is an energy translating device for translating input oscillatory electrical energy having first characteristics into output oscillatory electrical energy having second characteristics.
  • a filter typically a bandpass filter.
  • such a filter involves the use of a plurality of resonators which share a common piezoelectric body or wafer.
  • the Beaver-Sykes structure is distinguished from other outwardly similar structures by the combination of two features, namely, mass loading and acoustic coupling.
  • mass loading refers to a particular electrode mass which is determined by the nature of the piezoelectric body and its thickness, and by the size and density of the electrodes which make up each of the resonators.
  • Mass loading which conforms to the principles taught by Beaver and Sykes, is evidenced by a number of specific conditions.
  • acoustic energy supplied in or near to one of the resonators is essentially confined or trapped within the boundaries of the resonator so that very little escapes to the surrounding piezoelectric body.
  • the relatively limited amount of acoustic energy that does escape from the energy trapping action of the resonators decreases exponentially in magnitude as the distance from the resonator increases.
  • the contour and dimensions of the outer perimeter of the piezoelectric body have no effect on the nature of the energy transmission accom' plished.
  • Acoustic coupling refers to the existence of an energy channel in the piezoelectric body which effects the transmission of acoustic energy between input and output electrodes. Such coupling is evidenced or manifested by a number of conditions which include, for example, the placing of all resonators within the acoustic field of adjacent resonators.
  • the only physical connecting path between the input and output resonators is in the piezoelectric body and substantially all of the energy transferred from one resonator to another is acoustic energy.
  • the image impedance of the structure or circuit, as a whole conforms to a specifically defined pattern.
  • the structure or circuit, as a whole has an equivalent circuit in the form of a lattice network with resonant and antiresonant frequencies characterized by a specifically defined relation.
  • any effective band filter including a monolithic crystal filter
  • the transfer characteristics of any effective band filter should be marked by steep skirts of attenuation and the passband should be bracketed by distinct attenuating peaks.
  • Monolithic crystal filters have been traditionally designed and used as all pole devices and, in those instances where sharper skirts are desired, it is conventional to increase the order of the transfer function which physically means to increase the number of resonators.
  • 16th order (8 resonator) monolithic crystal filters (MCFs) are known in commercial use, it is evident that increases in the order of the filtering function necessarily increases the complexity and cost of manufacture.
  • An alternate method for realizing sharper skirts in MCFs is to introduce transmission zeros close to the passband.
  • this method has been carried out by both charge cancellation and by phase cancellation.
  • Charge cancellation depends on the interconnection of split electrodes to transfer charge from one resonator to another. At certain frequencies, however, charge cancellation has the effect of inhibiting the electric field across the resonators used to generate the charge transfer, thereby realizing transmission zeros at these frequencies. Attenuation peak location has been shown to depend on and therefore to be controlled by the area ratio of the split electrode. Thus far, however, the effectiveness of this technique has been limited to a tworesonator MCF.
  • Phase cancellation depends on generating two outputs equal in magnitude and opposite in phase at specified frequencies. Upon tying these two outputs together, transmission zeros may be realized at the specified frequencies.
  • phase cancellation technique an example of which is shown in my copending application, Ser. No. 63,204, filed Aug. I2, 1970, it has been found that the peak locations can generally be realized only at discrete frequencies.
  • a general object of the invention is to improve the transmission characteristics of monolithic crystal filters by the establishment of controllable transmission zeros relatively close to the passband while avoiding, however, the shortcomings encountered in the charge and phase cancellation methods.
  • a filter in accordance with the invention has two transmission paths in parallel one being the conventional path from one acoustically coupled resonator to the next, which path is restricted to the piezoelectric body, and the other being the ungrounded path utilizing the external conductor that is connected between the two nonshorted resonators.
  • the phase differences that arise by virtue of the two transmission paths result in selective cancellation or reinforcement of various frequencies.
  • the passband is shaped by the introduction of transmission zeros relatively close to the passband so that the skirts of the characteristic filter transmission plot are steepened or sharpened, thereby enhancing filter selectivity.
  • the wide number of forms in which the invention may be practiced stems from the fact that either high order filters (many resonators) or low order filters (few resonators) may be employed and further from the fact that a variety of resonator interconnection combinations fall within the principles of the invention.
  • FIG. 1A is a sketch of a conventional n-resonator MCF
  • FIG. 1B is a schematic circuit diagram of an equivalent circuit for the MCF of FIG. 1A;
  • FIGS. 2A, 2B and 2C are schematic circuit diagrams illustrating network transformations
  • FIG. 3A is a schematic circuit diagram of a first embodiment of the invention.
  • FIG. 3B is a plot of the transfer characteristics to be expected from the filter of FIG. 3A;
  • FIG. 4 is a schematic circuit diagram of an equivalent circuit of the MCF filter of FIG. 3A;
  • FIG. 5A is a schematic circuit diagram of a second embodiment of the invention.
  • FIG. 5B is a plot of the transfer characteristics to be expected from the filter of FIG. 5A;
  • FIG. 6 is a schematic circuit diagram of an equivalent circuit for the filter of FIG. 5A;
  • FIG. 7A is a schematic circuit diagram of a third embodiment of the invention.
  • FIG. 7B is a plot of the transfer characteristics to be expected from the filter of FIG. 73;
  • FIG. 8 is a schematic circuit diagram of an equivalent circuit for the filter of FIG. 7A;
  • FIGS. 9A, 9B and 9C illustrate the use of an external capacitor to control the position of transmission zeros in different embodiments of the invention.
  • FIG. 10 is a schematic circuit diagram of an 8- resonator MCF in accordance with the invention.
  • prior art MCFs typically employ a plurality of internal resonators (i.e., excluding the input and output resonators) which are normally shorted to ground since it is known that the short circuit provides the simplest and mostreliable type of resonator termination.
  • filters with other than all pole designs are realized by selectively interconnecting certain ones of the internal resonators without, however, grounding the interconnected portions of those resonators.
  • the underlying theory of the invention may best be explained in terms of the sketch of a conventional monolithic crystal filter shown in FIG. 1A as supplemented by its equivalent circuit shown in FIG. 1B.
  • a conventional MCF employs a piezoelectric body 100 sandwiched between a plurality of electrode pairs l0lA-B, 102A-B, 103A-B, nA-B and 104A-B to form an input resonator 101, an output resonator 104 and intermediate or auxiliary resonators 102, 103 n.
  • a signal source not shown, is normally connected across the input points 11l2 and a load or utilization circuit is connected across the output points 13-14.
  • One side of the filter which includes the input terminal 12, the electrodes 1018, 1028, nB and 1048 and the output terminal 14 is connected to a source of reference potential such as ground.
  • the auxiliary resonators 102, 103 and n are shown open circuited simply by way ofillustration. More generally, these resonators are shorted and connected to ground.
  • the external terminals comprise the terminal set 11-12 and 13-14 located between the outside world and the MCF, i.e., the physical leads.
  • the internal terminals consist of the nodes of the resonator such as nodes l5, l6 and 17 of FIG. 1A.
  • the capacitive inverter CI which, as stated above, represents the piezoelectric coupling.
  • FIGS. 2A, 2B and 2C The effect of these terminations as seen by the internal terminals is illustrated by the transformations shown in FIGS. 2A, 2B and 2C, respectively.
  • FIG. 2A the resonator equivalent consisting of the two series capacitors C, and the shunt capacitors C,,, -C, is transformed into an open circuit by the shorting termination.
  • a source R termination is transformed into an inductance L, and a conductance G, in shunt with a current source I, where:
  • the internal terminals of the input resonator can only be terminated in the shunt combination of a conductance, an inductance and a current source, and the internal terminals of the output resonator can only be terminated in the shunt combination of a conductance and an inductance. Furthermore, the internal terminals of the auxiliary or remaining resonators can only be terminated in an open circuit or coupled to-another resonator through a capacitive 11.
  • interconnecting the external terminals of two resonators is equivalent to capacitively coupling their respective internal terminals and slightly mistuning the resonators being interconnected, the mistuning being the result of the shunt capacitors of the capacitive 11'.
  • This arrangement has the effect, in accordance with the invention, of generating transmission zeros in a MCF. Three cases will be discussed to illustrate how these transmission zeros are established and, from these illustrative cases, it will be evident that the same principles may be applied in accordance with the invention to any monolithic crystal filter that includes two or more auxiliary (non-input or output) resonators.
  • the first two cases realize one transmission zero below the passband and the third case realizes a pair of transmission zeros, one on either side of the band.
  • Base 1 the case of the filter structure shown in FIG. 3A, which includes an input resonator 101, an output resonator 104, and two auxiliary resonators 1.02 and 103. Each of the latter two resonators has a respective top electrode 102A and 103A which are connected together by a floating conducting path 105, whereas the bottom electrodes 1028 and 1038, along with electrodes 10113 and 1043, are connected to a common reference potential point which may be ground.
  • FIGS. 2A, 2B and 2C Using the transformations of FIGS. 2A, 2B and 2C on the equivalent circuit shown in FIG. 1B, one obtains the equiva lent circuit shown in FIG. 4, i.e., a circuit which is equivalent to the filter of FIG. 3A.
  • Y is the admittance between nodes i and j. From these equations one can obtain the transfer impedance as follows:
  • the zeros of N can be found from:
  • Case 3 The MCF of FIG. 7A is identical to that shown in FIGS. 3A and 5A with the exception of the specific resonator interconnections.
  • resonators 102 and 103 are connected as the input and output elements, respectively, while the end resonators 101 and 104 are connected as the auxiliary elements.
  • the zeros are somewhat closer to the passband and it can be shown that their location can be precisely controlled by the tuning frequency of the auxiliary resonators 101 and 104 and by either one or all three of the coupling coefficients k k and k USE OF AN EXTERNAL CAPACITOR
  • one additional parameter namely the capacitance ratio
  • the capacitance ratio may be employed effectively to control the transmission zero location and hence the location of attenuation peaks in relation to the passband. It is found that by increasing this ratio the'peaks can be moved closer to the band.
  • the capacity ratio may be increased advantageously by the use of an external capacitor which increases the static capacity of the resonators that it interconnects. Additionally, it has been found that this method moves the attenuation peaks closer to the band without in any way disturbing the parameters of the filter.
  • FIGS. 9A, 9B and 9C Examples of the use of an external capacitor in accordance with the invention are shown in FIGS. 9A, 9B and 9C.
  • the MCFs in these figures correspond, respectively, to the MCFs in FIGS. 3A, 5A and 7A, the difference in each instance being the use of an external capacitor C connected in the manner shown.
  • transmission zeros can also be realized in MCFs having more than four resonators. Also, when more than four resonators are used the number of zeros realized and the possible cases to be considered increase. For example, it can readily be verified that for an eight resonator MCF a maximum of four transmission zeros can be realized, with two appearing on either side of the passband.
  • the interconnections required for such a filter are illustrated in FIG. 10 where the auxiliary resonators 101 and 104 are tied together in the manner shown in FIG. 7 and the resonators 102 and 103 are connected as input and output elements. Additionally, however, each of four auxiliary resonators 105, 106, 107 and 108 is shorted and grounded in conventional fashion.
  • a monolithic crystal filter comprising, in combination,
  • a plurality of resonators each including a respective portion of a common piezoelectric body sandwiched between a respective pair of electrodes
  • said resonators including an input resonator, an output resonator and at least two auxiliary resonators,
  • auxiliary resonators a nongrounded, floating, short circuiting, conducting path external to said body connecting one electrode of one of said auxiliary resonators to a corresponding electrode of another of said auxiliary resonators, both of said auxiliary resonators being nonshorted an input point and means independent of said path directly connecting said input point to an electrode of said input resonator, and
  • Apparatus in accordance with claim 2 including means connecting one side of each of said resonators to a source of reference potential.
  • a monolithic crystal filter comprising, in combination,
  • a plurality of resonators each including a respective portion of a common piezoelectric body sandwiched between a respective pair of electrodes
  • said resonators including an input resonator, an output resonator and at least two auxiliary resonators,
  • auxiliary resonators a nongrounded, short circuiting conducting path external to said body connecting one electrode of one of said auxiliary resonators to a corresponding electrode of another of said auxiliary resonators, both of said auxiliary resonators being nonshorted an input point and means independent of said path directly connecting said input point to an electrode of said input resonator, and
  • Apparatus in accordance with claim 7 including a capacitor connected between said path and a source of reference potential.

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  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Crystallography & Structural Chemistry (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Acoustics & Sound (AREA)
  • Piezo-Electric Or Mechanical Vibrators, Or Delay Or Filter Circuits (AREA)

Abstract

In a multiresonator modified monolithic crystal filter employing a combination of mass loading and acoustic coupling, a direct nongrounded conductor, external to the piezoelectric body between two of the resonators, establishes a second transmission path through the filter. Attenuation peaks with control over their position are established thereby which enhances filter selectivity.

Description

United States Patent [1 1 a Braun June 12, 1973 ['54] RESONATOR INTERCONNECTIONS m 2,l98,684 4/1940 Sykes 333/72 MONOLITHIC CRYSTAL FILTERS $656180 Inventor: Arthur R echtm an l iraun, Allentown, Pa.
As si gneez nen rzi siiaaz Laboratories in US. Cl 333/72, 3l0/9.8, 333/70 Int. Cl. H03h 7/10, H03h 9/00 Field of Search 333/70, 72; BIO/9.8
References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 9/l97l Phillips 333/72 8/1967 Blum 333/72 X 8/1968 4/1945 Sykes 333/72 Nakazawa 333/72 Primary Examiner-Rudolph V; Rolinec Assistant E tgmiger -Saxfield Chatmon, -Jr. A ttorney W. L. Keefauver [57] ABSTRACT 14 Claims, 18 Drawing Figures n t p l3 c I36 r R' 9 IOIA |02A IOBA |04A LT r r T IOI loza I mag- Io4/ 3 9 A IOIBJ |o2B los I048 4/1972 Braun 333/72 Pmmmwm 3.739304 FIG. 3B
db ATTENUATION FREQUENCY HZ ATTENUATION PEAK LOCATIGN I FILTER CENTER Y FREQUENCY Pmmgn JUN 1 2 ma SHEEIGUFG FIG. 9A
FIG. .98
FIG. /0
RESONATOR INTERCONNECTIONS IN MONOLITHIC CRYSTAL FILTERS BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 1. Field of the Invention This invention relates to energy translating devices and, more particularly, to monolithic crystal filters.
2. Description of the Prior Art The term monolithic crystal filter as used herein is meant to define the basic filter structure disclosed in US. Pat. No. 3,564,463, issued on Feb. 16,1971 to W. B. Beaver and R. A. Sykes. In its broadest terms, the Beaver-Sykes apparatus is an energy translating device for translating input oscillatory electrical energy having first characteristics into output oscillatory electrical energy having second characteristics. One specific use to which such a structure may be put is that of a filter, typically a bandpass filter. In terms of structure, such a filter involves the use of a plurality of resonators which share a common piezoelectric body or wafer. The Beaver-Sykes structure is distinguished from other outwardly similar structures by the combination of two features, namely, mass loading and acoustic coupling. The term mass loading refers to a particular electrode mass which is determined by the nature of the piezoelectric body and its thickness, and by the size and density of the electrodes which make up each of the resonators.
Mass loading, which conforms to the principles taught by Beaver and Sykes, is evidenced by a number of specific conditions. For example, acoustic energy supplied in or near to one of the resonators is essentially confined or trapped within the boundaries of the resonator so that very little escapes to the surrounding piezoelectric body. Also, the relatively limited amount of acoustic energy that does escape from the energy trapping action of the resonators decreases exponentially in magnitude as the distance from the resonator increases. Further, the contour and dimensions of the outer perimeter of the piezoelectric body have no effect on the nature of the energy transmission accom' plished. Finally, with the proper mass loading, there is a substantial difference between the resonant frequency of the resonators and the resonant frequency of the unloaded portions of the piezoelectric body.
Acoustic coupling, the second of the key distinguishing features of a Beaver-Sykes-type filter, refers to the existence of an energy channel in the piezoelectric body which effects the transmission of acoustic energy between input and output electrodes. Such coupling is evidenced or manifested by a number of conditions which include, for example, the placing of all resonators within the acoustic field of adjacent resonators. Heretofore, in monolithic crystal filters of the type described, the only physical connecting path between the input and output resonators is in the piezoelectric body and substantially all of the energy transferred from one resonator to another is acoustic energy.
By virtue of the combination of the features of mass loading and acoustic coupling, the image impedance of the structure or circuit, as a whole, conforms to a specifically defined pattern. Additionally, the structure or circuit, as a whole, has an equivalent circuit in the form of a lattice network with resonant and antiresonant frequencies characterized by a specifically defined relation.
In order to ensure the sharpest possible cutoff action, and a corresponding high degree of selectivity, the transfer characteristics of any effective band filter, including a monolithic crystal filter, should be marked by steep skirts of attenuation and the passband should be bracketed by distinct attenuating peaks. Monolithic crystal filters have been traditionally designed and used as all pole devices and, in those instances where sharper skirts are desired, it is conventional to increase the order of the transfer function which physically means to increase the number of resonators. Although 16th order (8 resonator) monolithic crystal filters (MCFs) are known in commercial use, it is evident that increases in the order of the filtering function necessarily increases the complexity and cost of manufacture.
An alternate method for realizing sharper skirts in MCFs, is to introduce transmission zeros close to the passband. In the past, this method has been carried out by both charge cancellation and by phase cancellation. Charge cancellation depends on the interconnection of split electrodes to transfer charge from one resonator to another. At certain frequencies, however, charge cancellation has the effect of inhibiting the electric field across the resonators used to generate the charge transfer, thereby realizing transmission zeros at these frequencies. Attenuation peak location has been shown to depend on and therefore to be controlled by the area ratio of the split electrode. Thus far, however, the effectiveness of this technique has been limited to a tworesonator MCF.
Phase cancellation, on the other hand, depends on generating two outputs equal in magnitude and opposite in phase at specified frequencies. Upon tying these two outputs together, transmission zeros may be realized at the specified frequencies. In the employment of the phase cancellation technique, however, an example of which is shown in my copending application, Ser. No. 63,204, filed Aug. I2, 1970, it has been found that the peak locations can generally be realized only at discrete frequencies.
A general object of the invention, therefore, is to improve the transmission characteristics of monolithic crystal filters by the establishment of controllable transmission zeros relatively close to the passband while avoiding, however, the shortcomings encountered in the charge and phase cancellation methods.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION The stated object and related objects are achieved in accordance with the principles of the invention by modifying an otherwise conventional MCF by the em ploymeht of resonator interconnections that, in effect, establish a second transmission path through the filter. This supplemental path is in addition to the normal or direct path that is provided solely by the common piezoelectric body. The invention is not restricted to any single or specific resonator interconnection but, instead, may be practiced in a variety of different forms or circuit configurations. A single key feature, however, characterizes all of the embodiments of the invention. Specifically, that feature, as indicated, is the use of an ungrounded conducting path which is connected between two nonshorted resonators and which is external to the piezoelectric body. Thus, a filter in accordance with the invention has two transmission paths in parallel one being the conventional path from one acoustically coupled resonator to the next, which path is restricted to the piezoelectric body, and the other being the ungrounded path utilizing the external conductor that is connected between the two nonshorted resonators. The phase differences that arise by virtue of the two transmission paths result in selective cancellation or reinforcement of various frequencies. Stated otherwise, the passband is shaped by the introduction of transmission zeros relatively close to the passband so that the skirts of the characteristic filter transmission plot are steepened or sharpened, thereby enhancing filter selectivity. The wide number of forms in which the invention may be practiced stems from the fact that either high order filters (many resonators) or low order filters (few resonators) may be employed and further from the fact that a variety of resonator interconnection combinations fall within the principles of the invention.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING FIG. 1A is a sketch of a conventional n-resonator MCF;
FIG. 1B is a schematic circuit diagram of an equivalent circuit for the MCF of FIG. 1A;
FIGS. 2A, 2B and 2C are schematic circuit diagrams illustrating network transformations;
FIG. 3A is a schematic circuit diagram of a first embodiment of the invention;
FIG. 3B is a plot of the transfer characteristics to be expected from the filter of FIG. 3A;
FIG. 4 is a schematic circuit diagram of an equivalent circuit of the MCF filter of FIG. 3A;
FIG. 5A is a schematic circuit diagram of a second embodiment of the invention;
FIG. 5B is a plot of the transfer characteristics to be expected from the filter of FIG. 5A;
FIG. 6 is a schematic circuit diagram of an equivalent circuit for the filter of FIG. 5A;
FIG. 7A is a schematic circuit diagram of a third embodiment of the invention;
FIG. 7B is a plot of the transfer characteristics to be expected from the filter of FIG. 73;
FIG. 8 is a schematic circuit diagram of an equivalent circuit for the filter of FIG. 7A;
FIGS. 9A, 9B and 9C illustrate the use of an external capacitor to control the position of transmission zeros in different embodiments of the invention; and
FIG. 10 is a schematic circuit diagram of an 8- resonator MCF in accordance with the invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION As indicated above, prior art MCFs typically employ a plurality of internal resonators (i.e., excluding the input and output resonators) which are normally shorted to ground since it is known that the short circuit provides the simplest and mostreliable type of resonator termination. In accordance with the invention, however, filters with other than all pole designs are realized by selectively interconnecting certain ones of the internal resonators without, however, grounding the interconnected portions of those resonators. The underlying theory of the invention may best be explained in terms of the sketch of a conventional monolithic crystal filter shown in FIG. 1A as supplemented by its equivalent circuit shown in FIG. 1B. As shown in the sketch, a conventional MCF employs a piezoelectric body 100 sandwiched between a plurality of electrode pairs l0lA-B, 102A-B, 103A-B, nA-B and 104A-B to form an input resonator 101, an output resonator 104 and intermediate or auxiliary resonators 102, 103 n. A signal source, not shown, is normally connected across the input points 11l2 and a load or utilization circuit is connected across the output points 13-14. One side of the filter, which includes the input terminal 12, the electrodes 1018, 1028, nB and 1048 and the output terminal 14 is connected to a source of reference potential such as ground. In FIG. 1A the auxiliary resonators 102, 103 and n are shown open circuited simply by way ofillustration. More generally, these resonators are shorted and connected to ground.
In the equivalent circuit of an n-resonator MCF shown in FIG. 18, series capacitors C,- C and series inductors L/K L/K L/K,, are combined with shunt capacitors C C,, C,, C,, C,,, C,,, C, and shunt inductors L, L/K, -L/K L/K,, n, where Kij is the coupling coefficient. The branch including the two series capacitors C and the shunt capacitors C and C is a capacitive inverter CI which represents the piezoelectric coupling.
In analyzing the foregoing circuits it is necessary at the outset to define two sets of terminals, namely, the external terminals and the internal terminals. The external terminals comprise the terminal set 11-12 and 13-14 located between the outside world and the MCF, i.e., the physical leads. The internal terminals, on the other hand, consist of the nodes of the resonator such as nodes l5, l6 and 17 of FIG. 1A. In terms of the equivalent circuit of FIG. 1A, which is shown in FIG. 18, however, the only difference between the two sets is the capacitive inverter CI which, as stated above, represents the piezoelectric coupling. For reasons which will become apparent, it is desirable to write the matrix description of the network in terms of the internal terminals. Accordingly, the effect of interconnecting the external terminals must be transformed onto the internal terminals through the capacitive inverter CI.
It is evident that the only termination that can appear across the external terminals of a resonator is:
l. a short circuit,
2. a source or a load, or
3. another resonator.
The effect of these terminations as seen by the internal terminals is illustrated by the transformations shown in FIGS. 2A, 2B and 2C, respectively. Thus, in FIG. 2A the resonator equivalent consisting of the two series capacitors C, and the shunt capacitors C,,, -C, is transformed into an open circuit by the shorting termination. In FIG. 28 a source R, termination is transformed into an inductance L, and a conductance G, in shunt with a current source I, where:
i =1 n/ K o 1;
G, R lK to center frequency; and
1 I O) I a o) In FIG. 2C the resonator termination results in the transformation represented by a capacitor Ca shunted by capacitors C, and C, where:
Based on the transformations shown, one may conclude that the internal terminals of the input resonator can only be terminated in the shunt combination of a conductance, an inductance and a current source, and the internal terminals of the output resonator can only be terminated in the shunt combination of a conductance and an inductance. Furthermore, the internal terminals of the auxiliary or remaining resonators can only be terminated in an open circuit or coupled to-another resonator through a capacitive 11. In other words, interconnecting the external terminals of two resonators is equivalent to capacitively coupling their respective internal terminals and slightly mistuning the resonators being interconnected, the mistuning being the result of the shunt capacitors of the capacitive 11'. This arrangement has the effect, in accordance with the invention, of generating transmission zeros in a MCF. Three cases will be discussed to illustrate how these transmission zeros are established and, from these illustrative cases, it will be evident that the same principles may be applied in accordance with the invention to any monolithic crystal filter that includes two or more auxiliary (non-input or output) resonators. The first two cases realize one transmission zero below the passband and the third case realizes a pair of transmission zeros, one on either side of the band. (Base 1 Consider, first, the case of the filter structure shown in FIG. 3A, which includes an input resonator 101, an output resonator 104, and two auxiliary resonators 1.02 and 103. Each of the latter two resonators has a respective top electrode 102A and 103A which are connected together by a floating conducting path 105, whereas the bottom electrodes 1028 and 1038, along with electrodes 10113 and 1043, are connected to a common reference potential point which may be ground. Using the transformations of FIGS. 2A, 2B and 2C on the equivalent circuit shown in FIG. 1B, one obtains the equiva lent circuit shown in FIG. 4, i.e., a circuit which is equivalent to the filter of FIG. 3A.
The matrix description for this four node circuit is where: Y is the admittance common to node i.
Y is the admittance between nodes i and j. From these equations one can obtain the transfer impedance as follows:
z. i r/I.)
wher
Z, transfer impedance and lAl determinant of admittance matrix. Using S as the complex frequency in the circuit of FIG. 4 one has:
Y G SC l/SL;
Y SC l/SL S Ca;
Y SC l/SL+ S Ca;
Y 6, SC, l/SL;
Y, Y Y =0;
Y S Cu k /SL and Using the equations (10) through (17), the numerator of equation (9) becomes:
12/ a4/ Ca n/ D]- Note that in this case the numerator of the transfer function is no longer a constant independent of frequency but a polynomial in the complex variable S. This necessarily implies that transmission zeros have been realized at those frequencies where equation (12) goes to zero. For the present case the location of these transmission zeros is given by:
S Ca (K /SL) 0 It is clear, therefore, that the transmission zero, realized in accordance with the invention in the manner described, may be controlled by the coupling coefficient 23 and by the capacitance Ca. Furthermore, as indicated above, the transmission zero ,will lie below the passband. Case 2 The four resonator MCF of FIG. 5A differs from the MCF of FIG. 3A only in the resonator interconnections. In FIG. 5A the functions of the resonators 101 and 102 are reversed so that resonator 101 is an auxiliary resonator and 102 is the input resonator. Auxiliary resonators 101 and 103 are connected by a floating conducting path 106. Employing the transformations illustrated in FIGS. 2A, 2B and 2C on the equivalent circuit shown in FIG. 18 results in the circuit of FIG. 6 which is the equivalent of the MCF of FIG. A, the filter with two interconnected nonadjacent resonators. The matrix description for this circuit becomes:
and the transfer impedance becomes:
1! IZ 13 a! a2 a: (22) Y Y Y; Z, I I =N/D For the circuit in FIG. 6 one has:
Y S Ca+ SC l/SL;
Y G SC l/SL;
Y 8C I/SL;
Y. 6., S Ca SC +1/SL;
za za/ J a in/ Y; S Ca The numerator of (IS) becomes:
ll lZ II! N a: a: a:
The zeros of N can be found from:
n az l2 13 O [S(Ca+C,) (l/SL)] n/8L) k /SL S Ca 0.
The location of these zeros is given by:
1 S= ij [Ca k 1 In contrast to the result in Case I, the location of the transmission zeros in Case 2 can be controlled by two coupling coefficients, k and k and the two capacitances C and Ca. As in the first case the peak appears below the passband although its position is substantially closer to the passband. Case 3 The MCF of FIG. 7A is identical to that shown in FIGS. 3A and 5A with the exception of the specific resonator interconnections. In FIG. 7A, resonators 102 and 103 are connected as the input and output elements, respectively, while the end resonators 101 and 104 are connected as the auxiliary elements. Using the transformation of FIGS. 2A, 2B and 2C on the equiva lent circuit of FIG. 13 results in the equivalent circuit for the MCF of FIG. 7A which is shown in FIG. 8. Although in this instance the mathematical analysis becomes somewhat more complex than these involved in Cases 1 and 2, it can be shown by the same general method of procedure that for Case 3 two transmission zeros are realized, one on either side of the passband. In this instance the zeros are somewhat closer to the passband and it can be shown that their location can be precisely controlled by the tuning frequency of the auxiliary resonators 101 and 104 and by either one or all three of the coupling coefficients k k and k USE OF AN EXTERNAL CAPACITOR In all cases in accordance with the invention one additional parameter, namely the capacitance ratio, may be employed effectively to control the transmission zero location and hence the location of attenuation peaks in relation to the passband. It is found that by increasing this ratio the'peaks can be moved closer to the band. In accordance with the invention it has been discovered that the capacity ratio may be increased advantageously by the use of an external capacitor which increases the static capacity of the resonators that it interconnects. Additionally, it has been found that this method moves the attenuation peaks closer to the band without in any way disturbing the parameters of the filter.
Examples of the use of an external capacitor in accordance with the invention are shown in FIGS. 9A, 9B and 9C. The MCFs in these figures correspond, respectively, to the MCFs in FIGS. 3A, 5A and 7A, the difference in each instance being the use of an external capacitor C connected in the manner shown.
MCFS EMPLOYING MORE THAN FOUR RESONATORS It should be pointed out that by using schemes similar to those described above, transmission zeros can also be realized in MCFs having more than four resonators. Also, when more than four resonators are used the number of zeros realized and the possible cases to be considered increase. For example, it can readily be verified that for an eight resonator MCF a maximum of four transmission zeros can be realized, with two appearing on either side of the passband. The interconnections required for such a filter are illustrated in FIG. 10 where the auxiliary resonators 101 and 104 are tied together in the manner shown in FIG. 7 and the resonators 102 and 103 are connected as input and output elements. Additionally, however, each of four auxiliary resonators 105, 106, 107 and 108 is shorted and grounded in conventional fashion.
It is to be understood that the embodiments disclosed herein are merely illustrative and that various modifications may be effected by persons skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
What is claimed is:
l. A monolithic crystal filter comprising, in combination,
a plurality of resonators each including a respective portion of a common piezoelectric body sandwiched between a respective pair of electrodes,
said resonators including an input resonator, an output resonator and at least two auxiliary resonators,
a nongrounded, floating, short circuiting, conducting path external to said body connecting one electrode of one of said auxiliary resonators to a corresponding electrode of another of said auxiliary resonators, both of said auxiliary resonators being nonshorted an input point and means independent of said path directly connecting said input point to an electrode of said input resonator, and
an output point and means independent of said path directly connecting said output point to an electrode of said output resonator.
2. Apparatus in accordance with claim 1 wherein the number of said auxiliary resonators exceeds two, and
means shorting each of said auxiliary resonators that is otherwise unconnected.
3. Apparatus in accordance with claim 2 including means connecting one side of each of said resonators to a source of reference potential.
4. Apparatus in accordance with claim 1 wherein said auxiliary resonators are positioned substantially between said input and output resonators.
5. Apparatus in accordance with claim 1 wherein said resonators are in substantial alignment and said input resonator is positioned substantially between two of said auxiliary resonators.
6. Apparatus in accordance with claim 1 wherein said input and output resonators are positioned between two of said auxiliary resonators.
7. A monolithic crystal filter comprising, in combination,
a plurality of resonators each including a respective portion of a common piezoelectric body sandwiched between a respective pair of electrodes,
said resonators including an input resonator, an output resonator and at least two auxiliary resonators,
a nongrounded, short circuiting conducting path external to said body connecting one electrode of one of said auxiliary resonators to a corresponding electrode of another of said auxiliary resonators, both of said auxiliary resonators being nonshorted an input point and means independent of said path directly connecting said input point to an electrode of said input resonator, and
an output point and means independent of said path directly connecting said output point to an electrode of said output resonator.
8. Apparatus in accordance with claim 7 wherein said auxiliary resonators are positioned substantially between said input and output resonators.
9. Apparatus in accordance with claim 7 wherein said resonators are in substantial alignment and said input resonator is positioned substantially between two of said auxiliary resonators.
10. Apparatus in accordance with claim 7 wherein said input and output resonators are positioned between two of said auxiliary resonators.
11. Apparatus in accordance with claim 7 including a capacitor connected between said path and a source of reference potential.
12. Apparatus in accordance with claim 11 wherein said auxiliary resonators are positioned substantially between said input and output resonators.
13. Apparatus in accordance with claim 18 wherein said resonators are in substantial alignment and said input resonator is positioned substantially between two of said auxiliary resonators.
14. Apparatus in accordance with claim 11 wherein said input and output resonators are positioned between two of said auxiliary resonators.

Claims (14)

1. A monolithic crystal filter comprising, in combination, a plurality of resonators each including a respective portion of a common piezoelectric body sandwiched between a respective pair of electrodes, said resonators including an input resonator, an output resonator and at least two auxiliary resonators, a nongrounded, floating, short circuiting, conducting path external to said body connecting one electrode of one of said auxiliary resonators to a corresponding electrode of another of said auxiliary resonators, both of said auxiliary resonators being nonshorted an input point and means independent of said path directly connecting said input point to an electrode of said input resonator, and an output point and means independent of said path directly connecting said output point to an electrode of said output resonator.
2. Apparatus in accordance with claim 1 wherein the number of said auxiliary resonators exceeds two, and means shorting each of said auxiliary resonators that is otherwise unconnected.
3. Apparatus in accordance with claim 2 including means connecting one side of each of said resonators to a source of reference potential.
4. Apparatus in accordance with claim 1 wherein said auxiliary resonators are positioned substantIally between said input and output resonators.
5. Apparatus in accordance with claim 1 wherein said resonators are in substantial alignment and said input resonator is positioned substantially between two of said auxiliary resonators.
6. Apparatus in accordance with claim 1 wherein said input and output resonators are positioned between two of said auxiliary resonators.
7. A monolithic crystal filter comprising, in combination, a plurality of resonators each including a respective portion of a common piezoelectric body sandwiched between a respective pair of electrodes, said resonators including an input resonator, an output resonator and at least two auxiliary resonators, a nongrounded, short circuiting conducting path external to said body connecting one electrode of one of said auxiliary resonators to a corresponding electrode of another of said auxiliary resonators, both of said auxiliary resonators being nonshorted an input point and means independent of said path directly connecting said input point to an electrode of said input resonator, and an output point and means independent of said path directly connecting said output point to an electrode of said output resonator.
8. Apparatus in accordance with claim 7 wherein said auxiliary resonators are positioned substantially between said input and output resonators.
9. Apparatus in accordance with claim 7 wherein said resonators are in substantial alignment and said input resonator is positioned substantially between two of said auxiliary resonators.
10. Apparatus in accordance with claim 7 wherein said input and output resonators are positioned between two of said auxiliary resonators.
11. Apparatus in accordance with claim 7 including a capacitor connected between said path and a source of reference potential.
12. Apparatus in accordance with claim 11 wherein said auxiliary resonators are positioned substantially between said input and output resonators.
13. Apparatus in accordance with claim 18 wherein said resonators are in substantial alignment and said input resonator is positioned substantially between two of said auxiliary resonators.
14. Apparatus in accordance with claim 11 wherein said input and output resonators are positioned between two of said auxiliary resonators.
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US3944951A (en) * 1974-11-21 1976-03-16 Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated Monolithic crystal filter
US4484158A (en) * 1982-07-07 1984-11-20 General Electric Company Monolithic crystal filter and method of manufacturing same
US4604543A (en) * 1984-11-29 1986-08-05 Hitachi, Ltd. Multi-element ultrasonic transducer
US5231327A (en) * 1990-12-14 1993-07-27 Tfr Technologies, Inc. Optimized piezoelectric resonator-based networks

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JPS5787228A (en) * 1980-11-18 1982-05-31 Oki Electric Ind Co Ltd Monolithic filter

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US3396327A (en) * 1961-12-27 1968-08-06 Toyotsushinki Kabushiki Kaisha Thickness shear vibration type, crystal electromechanical filter
US3334307A (en) * 1966-11-14 1967-08-01 Zenith Radio Corp Multi-electrode acoustic amplifier with unitary transducing and translating medium
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* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3944951A (en) * 1974-11-21 1976-03-16 Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated Monolithic crystal filter
US4484158A (en) * 1982-07-07 1984-11-20 General Electric Company Monolithic crystal filter and method of manufacturing same
US4604543A (en) * 1984-11-29 1986-08-05 Hitachi, Ltd. Multi-element ultrasonic transducer
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